301 
high, were observed, but none yet even in bud. The flowers are 
white with pale violet flush, and the two small upper lobes are 
pink underneath. Several V. Thapsus were in the same colony 
in the dense brushwood, but hitherto there is no sign of hybrids. 
— H. S. Thompson. 
Euphrasia Rostkoviana Hayne [599]- Kittow’s Moor, near 
Treneglos, N. Cornwall, v.c. 2, Aug. 28 and Sept. 14, 1924. 
Kittow’s Moor and Wilsey Down are adjacent. No. 599 varied 
from a whitish ground colour in the corolla to rather deep purple, 
so that the soil, which was a barren moor overlying slate rather 
strongly impregnated with iron, is not entirely responsible for 
those of deeper colour. — J. E. Little. This is a fine set of speci- 
mens representing a form intermediate between the ordinary 
British E. Rostkoviana and E. Vigursii, with the strict habit of 
E. hirtella. About a quarter of the plants have deep purple 
Vigursii- like flowers, while in the majority the upper lip is 
bluish and the lower one white, as in a Surrey form of E. Rost- 
koviana. A few individuals show a corolla of intermediate 
colouring, very heavily and beautifully striped. This particular 
form seems to have no distinctive name. — H. W. Pugsley. 
E. gracilis Fr. [603]. Kittow’s Moor, N. Cornwall, v.c. 2, 
Aug. 28, 1924. Flowers very small, but brightly coloured; 
growing intermixed with E. Rostkoviana.— J . E. Little. Correctly 
named. The specimens are taller and less branched than those 
usually met with in Scotland. — H.W.P. 
E. hirtella Jorcl. Between Llanberris and Cwm-y-glo, Car- 
narvon, v.c. 49, Aug 30, 1924. — J. L. O’Loughlin. This may be 
rightly named, but it is difficult to be certain with starved and 
scrappy material. — H.W.P. 
E. [nemorosa Gremli] [606]. Wilsey Down, N. Cornwall, 
Aug. 24, 1924. Ground colour of the corolla an unusually deep 
purple. — J. E. Little. This is a vigorous form of E. confusa 
Pugsl., with purplish flowers such as I have not seen before. I 
should refer it to f. albida, extending the diagnosis of that form 
(Journ. Bot. lx. p. 2, 1922) to cover it thus: “Planta corollis 
albidis vel purpureis nec luteis . . . H W.P. I would refer this 
to E. Kerneri. — W.H.P. 
E. nemorosa Gremli [607], Koadside, near Tresoke, David- 
stone, N. Cornwall, Aug. 24, 1924. Ground colour of the corolla 
whitish. — J. E. Little. A slender form of E. nemorosa Id von 
Martins.— H.W.P. 
